Robyn Millan


Robyn M. Millan is an American experimental physicist, best known for her work on radiation belts that surround the earth.

Education

Millan received a B.A. in Astronomy and Physics, a M.A. in Physics, and a Ph.D. in Physics, all from the University of California, Berkeley.

Career and impact

Millan is an associate professor of physics and astronomy at Dartmouth College. Her research includes the use of high-altitude scientific balloon experiments to study Earth's radiation belts, specifically, the loss of relativistic electrons from the outer radiation belts into Earth's atmosphere. Millan is principal investigator for the BARREL project, in which two balloon launches in 2013 and 2014 floated in the circular wind patterns above the South Pole. Each balloon tracked electrons from space that get swept up in Earth's magnetic field and slide down into Earth's atmosphere. The first test of BARREL—funded by NASA and also supported by NSF's Office of Polar Programs that supports logistics of all research in Antarctica—began in December 2008.
Her prior positions include research appointments at Dartmouth and at the University of California, Berkeley. Millan served on the NRC Committee on the role and scope of mission-enabling activities in NASA's space and earth science missions and on the panel on solar wind-magnetosphere interactions for the committee for a decadal strategy for solar and space physics.
Millan has inspired several young researchers as a positive influence on women in the area of space physics. A former student and project manager for the SpaceX launch, Julianna Scheimann, made efforts to re-land the first stage booster and has worked for the SES-9 launch. Scheimann worked with Milan on the very early BARREL prototype payloads and conducted her senior thesis on the BARREL piggyback test flight.

Awards and honours

In 2017, Millan received the NASA Exceptional Public Achievement Medal. In 2011, Millan received the Dartmouth dean of the faculty award for outstanding mentoring and advising and for overall career distinction. In 1995, Millan received the Department of Astronomy's Dorthea Klumpke Roberts award.

Selected works

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